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Ligand-Engineered HgTe Colloidal Quantum Dot Solids for Infrared Photodetectors

95

Citations

31

References

2022

Year

Abstract

HgTe colloidal quantum dots (CQDs) are promising absorber systems for infrared detection due to their widely tunable photoresponse in all infrared regions. Up to now, the best-performing HgTe CQD photodetectors have relied on using aggregated CQDs, limiting the device design, uniformity and performance. Herein, we report a ligand-engineered approach that produces well-separated HgTe CQDs. The present strategy first employs strong-binding alkyl thioalcohol ligands to enable the synthesis of well-dispersed HgTe cores, followed by a second growth process and a final postligand modification step enhancing their colloidal stability. We demonstrate highly monodisperse HgTe CQDs in a wide size range, from 4.2 to 15.0 nm with sharp excitonic absorption fully covering short- and midwave infrared regions, together with a record electron mobility of up to 18.4 cm<sup>2</sup> V<sup>-1</sup> s<sup>-1</sup>. The photodetectors show a room-temperature detectivity of 3.9 × 10<sup>11</sup> jones at a 1.7 μm cutoff absorption edge.

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